Pakistan not much responsible for climate change: official

Author: Agencies

Pakistan is among those countries who are not very much responsible for climate change, but have to face its punishment, said Joudat Ayaz, a senior official, Ministry of Climate Change.

While Pakistan strives to reduce its GHG emissions, “the punishment is quite high as compared with our faults,” he added in an interview with Gwadar Pro. When it comes to 2022, millions of people have been severely affected by the intense heat that has swept across Pakistan since March.

Across South Asia, sweltering temperatures have been linked to an increase in heat-related deaths, failed wheat harvests, power outages and fires, with poor and marginalized communities particularly affected.

According to Global Climate Risk Index 2021 released by Germanwatch – a report that analyses and ranks to what extent countries and regions have been affected by impacts of climate related extreme weather events (storms, floods, heatwaves etc.) – developing countries are particularly affected by the impacts of climate change.

Over the last few years, reads the report, “countries like Haiti, the Philippines and Pakistan that are recurrently affected by catastrophes continuously rank among the most affected countries both in the long-term index and in the index for the respective year.”

Joudat Ayaz stated, “Our fruits and crops cannot make full fruit or grains due to high temperatures this year. And if the temperature of the world increases from certain level then many coastal cities will get under the water and apparently Pakistan’s coastline will be affected.”

As a result of global warming, rapidly melting glaciers have created over 3,044 glacial lakes in Gilgit-Baltistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. Thirty-three of these could burst at any moment.

“We were able to divert families and people, but this is showing us how real and dangerous climate stress is for Pakistan, it’s quite literally here and now,” Sherry Rehman, Federal Minister for Climate Change, once told the BBC World Service Newshour radio programme.

“The sad part of the story is that we are one of the lowest emitters in the world, and yet we are experiencing the ravages of an almost existential shift in climate patterns and are a living example of all the crises that can erupt.”

“Climate is discussed in the world but it is not taken seriously,” Joudat Ayaz told the reporter.

Historical climate emissions should be paid attention to as climate change is “created by big polluting countries. Basically, their ancestors. ”

“World leaders were deciding by sitting in a room. The majority of them were more than sixty years old. Some were more than seventy.

People sitting out there and protesting for green peace were mostly twenty to thirty-five years old.

They were saying that when the effect of global warming appeared all these old men of offices would have died.

We have to live with the consequences of their decisions,” Joudat Ayaz explained.

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